Albion
Facilitator
- Dec 8, 2004
- 111,127
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- United States
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- Anglican
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- Married
Hmm. I would think that those who are in the know about everything dealing with Masonry would not be able to say that.
I have read some of those criticisms, and I myself have agreed here on CF that several popular criticisms have some merit.
This approach ^ covers all bases doesn't it? Here is a summary of how it works for the critic:So nobody questions and everybody goes along to get along.
What outsiders know more about is all counter-intuitive to being an insider.
Unless of course we are talking about X-insiders.
If a person joins Masonry, he must never ever leave if he finds that the organization is not to his liking. Of course, that is silly as an argument and defies all the evidence.
And if he does not withdraw, then it proves that he is "just going along to get along". There is no other possibility, say the critics. It cannot be because the member did not find fault with the organizations policies or beliefs. All bases covered.
And finally, the critics know everything because they have the word of people who never were members OR ELSE they have the word of the handful of people who were once members but since have made a career out of writing and lecturing as former members. One or the other of those must be believed implicitly while no current member can possibly be telling the truth.
But wait. When considering the testimony of those former members and their websites, we must not forget that it is also an article of faith among the ordinary skeptics that the only people who really know what is going on in Masonry are part of the imaginary cabal of secret higher-ups who rule of the worlds political systems and economies while keeping the rank and file members in the dark. That includes the former member "experts!"
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